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  • Ankara: European Analyst Says Suspension Of EU Negotiations Unlikely

    EUROPEAN ANALYST SAYS SUSPENSION OF EU NEGOTIATIONS UNLIKELY

    Today's Zaman
    08 July 2009, Wednesday

    Turkey's EU bid would progress more easily if talks between Turkish
    Cypriot leader Mehmet Ali Talat and Greek Cypriot leader Dimitris
    Christofias lead to a settlement, according to Chislett.

    Turkey will face a "crunch point" in December as its status
    is reviewed in the upcoming European Union summit evaluating the
    country's membership, but a suspension of negotiations is not likely,
    a European analyst has said.

    William Chislett, a former Financial Times journalist who has written
    extensively on Spain and Turkey for the Elcano Royal Institute,
    Spain's leading think tank, stated in his recent report, "Turkey's
    EU Accession Reaches an Impasse," that talk of the suspension due to
    Turkey's failure to open its ports and airports to Greek Cypriot ships
    and aircraft is "most unlikely" because it would require a unanimous
    vote by all 27 EU countries. "Several of the big EU nations, such as
    the UK and Spain, would not be prepared to go so far," he wrote.

    In the best-case scenario, probably the most likely, he added, Turkey
    would be warned about the consequences of not meeting its obligations
    and given more time as both the Turkish Cypriot and Greek Cypriot
    presidents are negotiating about the reunification of the island.

    "A successful conclusion to these negotiations could lead to another
    referendum in 2010 on the issue, and a 'yes' vote on both sides
    would undoubtedly make it much easier for [Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip] Erdoðan to implement the protocol," he stated. If this
    happens, the eight chapters blocked by the European Commission as of
    December 2006 would be opened, he added. In 2006, the EU suspended
    negotiations on eight chapters due to Turkey's refusal to open
    its ports and airports to traffic from Greek Cyprus. The relations
    further soured in the run-up to the European Parliament elections in
    June when conservative and far-right politicians gained strength in
    their opposition to Turkey's membership. Chislett noted that French
    President Nicolas Sarkozy, backed by the German Chancellor Angela
    Merkel wants Turkey to have a privileged partnership with the EU.

    "The partnership idea, which has never been fully spelled out and
    is rejected by Turkey, may gain momentum as a result of the greater
    share of seats in the European Parliament won by extreme right-wing
    parties in June's European elections," he pointed out. "It is assumed
    that under a partnership deal Turkey would be integrated in European
    defense, security and foreign policy mechanisms, with eventual full
    membership in the relevant decision-making bodies."

    However, Chislett stated as a member of NATO Turkey has already spent
    57 years defending Europe and stated that it doesn't offer Turkey
    any privileges. "A privileged partnership offers no new privileges
    to Turkey and by excluding it from decision-making enforces the
    growing feeling in Turkey that the most the country can expect is to
    be treated as a second-class European citizen because it is poor,
    large and Muslim." He also noted that Turkey has already spent 46
    years in the "EU's anteroom," since becoming an associate member
    of the then European Economic Community in 1963. "Failure to make
    Turkey a full member, assuming it meets all the criteria one day,
    like all other countries that have negotiated their membership,
    would also erode the EU's credibility by showing to the world that
    it does not keep its word. The basic principle of Roman law -pacta
    sunt servanda (agreements must be kept)- is part of the European
    cultural heritage." 'Ergenekon case: historic opportunity' In
    his 32-page report Chislett explores such issues as politics, the
    reform process, the results of March's local elections, relations
    with Armenia, the Kurdish issue, Turkey's foreign policy, economy,
    and the trial of Ergenekon, which is accused of fomenting chaos to
    trigger a coup to overthrow the government. "This case represents
    an historic opportunity to confront what is known in Turkey as the
    'deep state,' a state within a state, and assert civilian control
    over the army," he stated. He also evaluated Erdoðan's ruling Justice
    and Development Party (AK Party), which has adopted a much slower
    pace of reform compared to its reformist first three years after it
    won the 2002 general election. "Once accession negotiations began
    in earnest, after October 2005, and the economic and political cost
    of EU reforms began to be felt, the AK Party's initial enthusiasm
    waned, sapped, to some extent, by the anti-membership statements
    coming out of Paris and Berlin and a feeling that however hard it
    might try, the door would never be opened." As another reason that
    may have influenced the AK Party's stagnancy in adopting reforms,
    he brought up the European Court of Human Rights' decision in 2005
    to uphold Turkey's ban on headscarves on university campuses. "It
    is said to have marked a turning point for Erdoðan [whose wife wears
    the headscarf] as he had hoped a favorable ruling would have enabled
    him to relax the rigidly secular norms and usher in more personal
    religious freedom in the public space." He also noted that support
    for the EU in Turkey is declining, from as much as 71 percent in 2004
    down to 42 percent in 2008 according to Eurobarometer surveys. The
    full report is available at the Web site of the Elcano Royal Institute.
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